Description: Abandoned Europe's largest underground airport and military air base on the border between Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina near the city of Biha, Bosnia. Once the largest underground airport and military air base in the former Yugoslavia, and one of the largest in Europe. (Photo: Transport-Photo Images via Global Look Press / Zuma Press /Thomas Windisch/Exclusivepix Med)

Title:
Abandoned Europe's largest underground airport and military air base

Description:
Abandoned Europe's largest underground airport and military air base..Å½eljava Air Base, situated on the border between Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina under PljeÅ¡evica Mountain, near the city of Biha?, Bosnia, was the largest underground airport and military air base in the former Yugoslavia, and one of the largest in Europe. The facilities are shared by the local governments of Biha? and Lika-Senj County in Croatia...Construction of the Å½eljava or Biha? Air Base, code-named ''Objekat 505'', began in 1948 and was completed in 1968. During those two decades, SFRJ spent approximately $6 billion on its construction, three times the combined current annual military budgets of Serbia and Croatia. It was one of the largest and most expensive military construction projects in Europe. The role of the facility was to establish, integrate, and coordinate a nationwide early warning radar network in SFRJ akin to NORAD. The complex was designed and built to sustain a direct hit from a 20-kiloton nuclear bomb, equivalent to the one dropped on Nagasaki. The main advantage of the base was the strategic location of its ''Celopek'' intercept and surveillance radar on Mount Pljesevica, at the nerve center of an advanced integrated air defense network covering the airspace and territory of Yugoslavia, and possibly further. In addition to its main roles as a protected radar installation, control center, and secure communications facility, the airbase contained underground tunnels housing two full fighter squadrons, one reconnaissance squadron, and associated maintenance facilities. ..Today, the base often serves as a waypoint for illegal migrants. A facility for asylum seekers was scheduled to open there in 2004 or 2005, but the idea was abandoned, and new plans were developed for it to become part of the Slunj military training grounds, and barracks from the nearby Udbina complex. This idea was dropped, however, in line with the agreement between the countries of former Yugoslavi

Date Created:
2017-03-15 00:00:00

Author:
Thomas Windisch/Exclusivepix Med

Job Identifier:
ZUMA-20170315_zaf_y60_053.jpg

Headline:
Abandoned Europe's largest underground airport and military air base